Dutch city is patently the world’s most inventive

From cancer-busting ultrasound techniques to ways to boost vitamins in tomatoes, Dutch tech-hub Eindhoven’s avalanche of patents has just earned it the crown of “most inventive city in the world.”

Despite the Dutch economy hobbling through its third recession since 2009, this southern city of about 750,000 has become a beacon of high-tech hope and is even compared to Silicon Valley in the US.

With 22.6 patents filed for every 10,000 residents, Forbes magazine this month named Eindhoven the world’s most inventive city.

Using a commonly used metric for mapping innovation called “patent intensity,” Forbes based its award on statistics from the Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD).

In 2011, 3,238 patent applications were filed in the Netherlands, according to the EU’s statistics office, Eurostat. Of these, the Eindhoven region, and in particular, its research and development hub, the High Tech Campus (HTC), accounted for 42 percent.

On the “smartest square kilometer in the Netherlands,” you will not find students at the sprawling HTC complex on Eindhoven’s outskirts.

Once a closed-off laboratory for Dutch electronics giant Philips, the campus houses more than 100 companies employing 8,000 researchers, developers and engineers.

“Here, every 20 minutes, a patent is created,” the HTC boasts on its Web site.

The sprawling complex with its ultra-modern glass-facaded buildings is set among green fields populated by leisurely grazing cows.

The HTC is at the heart of Eindhoven’s innovation and provides a space where big companies, such as Philips, collaborate with small startups.

Philips opened the facility in 2003, when the company had just gone through a round of layoffs. It offered former employees somewhere to launch startups and use their knowledge.

The result was an explosion of innovation.

“The idea [of the HTC] is based on a philosophy of ‘open innovation’ where high-tech businesses share knowledge ... to deliver better and quicker results,” said Jean-Paul van Oijen, sales manager at Brainport Development, whose job it is to stimulate investment in the Eindhoven region.

For a small startup like Miortech, which makes electronic tiles that deflect sunlight just like paper — seen as the next big thing in billboard displays — the campus is ideal.

“We have only five people on the payroll,” the company’s chief executive Hans Feil said.

The rest of the work is outsourced to scientists from other companies, while the facilities to do the research are rented from the HTC.

“We use shared facilities. It’s a very good spot to be. We are surrounded by people and companies with a similar mindset — high patent intensity,” Feil said.

The High Tech Campus forms part of the broader Brainport Region Eindhoven, or Brainport for short — an initiative that was rolled out by the Dutch government in 2004 to corral high-tech knowledge after not just Philips, but several other big companies laid off a swathe of highly skilled workers.

It works on a so-called “triple-helix concept” that brings together business, knowledge-based institutions and public money to create a space where enterprise can flourish, notching up about 60,000 new jobs in the region by 2011.

Together with the so-called Airport Amsterdam, which focuses business on the Schiphol International Airport hub and Seaport Rotterdam, Brainport today forms one of the three most important pillars of the Dutch economy.